Lost WWII Jewish Headstones Found in Greece

In a find that local Jewish groups have described as highly significant, Greek police said that hundreds of marble headstones and other fragments from Jewish graves destroyed during the Nazi occupation in World War II have been recovered.

The 668 fragments were found buried in a plot of land in Thessaloniki, Greece’s second largest city, following a 70-year search for the remains of graves smashed when the city’s main Jewish cemetery was destroyed.
The head of the city’s Jewish community, David Saltiel, said most of the gravestones found dated from the mid-1800s up until World War II.

“This is our history,” Saltiel, head of the Central Board of Jewish Communities in Greece, told The Associated Press. “Apart from the names, the (gravestones) also include the person’s occupation. So this is a historic record.” An estimated 60,000 Greek Jews, most of the country’s prewar Jewish population, were killed in the Holocaust.

Some Jewish cemeteries in Greece has also in recent times been vandalized amid concerns of anti-Semitism. Jewish leaders have also condemned the rise of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party that has 18 seats in Parliament and is soaring in polls on the back of an anti-immigrant campaign.